is te between your master thesis and your master thesis?
What was your most nervous moment?
I'm nervous now.
I wouldn't say I was nervous, but I was definitely excited because there's a lot of new experiences
and new things to get accustomed to, but I was most definitely only excited.
That you have this kind of, I think you call it imposter syndrome, that you will not be
good enough.
That was an anxiety I put on myself that I was not supposed to be good enough.
I really feel that I've got the opportunity to learn and to grow within my position.
People know that I won't know everything or almost anything from the beginning, so that's
part of the journey.
We mostly work on something that's called IEM, which is like a Massive Automation System,
which is like if you have never seen it before it can be complex.
So that the first few weeks mostly went to just learning the new software and what its
capabilities are.
My training, we have this test cabinet that we use to simulate where you get familiarized
with our software tools, how to create software, and also how to have our modules or hardware
where you connect and you simulate different pumps and valves and everything we deliver
on a vessel.
The work environment is very good.
Everyone is open, helpful.
It's a pretty young crowd, some seniors, everyone just helps each other and you need it to find
the best solutions for some of these problems.
I meet so many new people and I experience so many cultures, so yeah, fun.
I think that as long as you are curious and want to learn and you like technical stuff,
there's no reason not to apply for a job in KM.
It's just mostly just go for it actually.